YoVDO

Not Your Grandfather's Electricity - Physics and Future of Electrical Systems

Offered By: North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics via YouTube

Tags

Renewable Energy Courses Physics Courses Electricity Courses Semiconductors Courses Transformers Courses Smart Grids Courses Energy Consumption Courses

Course Description

Overview

Explore the evolution of electricity and its future in this 55-minute seminar from the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics. Delve into the physics of electricity, electrical circuit principles, renewable energy, and smart grid technology. Learn about the historical debate between Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, and how it relates to modern electrical systems. Discover topics such as connecting resistors, electric generation, turbine assembly, AC vs DC, transformers, semiconductor devices, and the electricity grid. Examine energy consumption patterns, renewable resources, capacity factors, and peak demand. Gain insights into the development of smart grids and the future of electricity distribution. Presented by NCSSM physics instructor Gabriel Stefan and Steve Mann, Director of Research at Solutions Generators Network, this seminar offers a comprehensive look at the past, present, and future of electrical systems and renewable energy.

Syllabus

Introduction
Connecting Resistors
Parallel Resistors
Electric Generation
Steam Turbine
Rotary Motion
Turbine Assembly
AC vs DC
Alternating Current
Single Phase Transformer
Semi Conductor Devices
Electricity Grid
Electricity Flow
Energy Consumption
Renewables
Capacity Factor
Peak Demand
Generation Resources
Smart Grid
Future Grid
FutureGrid


Taught by

North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics

Related Courses

Energy 101: The Big Picture
Georgia Institute of Technology via Coursera
Solar Energy
Delft University of Technology via edX
Sustainable Energy Innovation
Clemson University via Canvas Network
Water in a Thirsty World
Open2Study
Organic Solar Cells - Theory and Practice
Technical University of Denmark (DTU) via Coursera